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Name of author Rick Baker, P.Eng.

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Thought Tweet #880

by Rick Baker
On Nov 29, 2013

Thought Tweet #880 Negative feelings by their very nature tend to alienate and isolate us. Then they go about wasting much energy.

 

The Thinking Behind The Tweet

Feelings are mind states where egos are at work justifying their appetites.

While the voices of ego are little, they are incessant. Barrages of little voices fight to serve and satisfy the huge appetites of egos. Egos, their appetites, and their little but incessant voices are not to be ignored.

Tags:

Emotions & Feelings @ Work | Thought Tweets

Thought Tweet #879

by Rick Baker
On Nov 28, 2013

Thought Tweet #879 The greatest of leaders change themselves. They mould their character to improve their ability to influence others.

 

The Thinking Behind The Tweet

Sometimes they replace combative ways with kindness; sometimes they replace softer ways with assertiveness.

Other times they improve their voice, vocabulary, and body language to improve their communication style...adding clarity and power to it.

Great leaders are attuned to their habits, both the good ones and the bad ones. They choose to replace their bad habits with new things - good habits, habits proven to deliver positive results.

Beyond everything else, the greatest leaders are masters of self-awareness and self-control.

And they know leadership is an ongoing series of thought-and-action choices. So they define thought-and-action boundaries for themselves and they work continuously at living within those thought-and-action boundaries.

You are in business to generate money.

by Rick Baker
On Nov 28, 2013

Yes – there are many other reasons why you are driven to be in business. Regardless, you are in business to generate money. You have set a plan for your business and those plans include the generation of money to cover costs, which will include your personal remuneration.

When all of the costs are covered there will be profit…you have planned for gross profit. Linked to that profit, you likely have planned to make bonus payments to employees, including yourself and to other owner-operators, if any. After those payments are made, the remaining profit can either be left in your business as retained earnings or it can be paid out as dividends to owners.

There are lots of choices in business.

And, business is about generating profits and personal wealth.

Don't be shy about that.

Profit is a valuable thing in business.

Be clear about that.

Talk about profit.

Talk about profit and its relationship with your other corporate Values.

Use visual tools to clarify the picture as you see it.

For example...

In summary, you have 3 ways to receive money from your business:

  1. Salary [wages],
  2. Bonus, and
  3. Dividends.

Many might view the following question as rhetorical.

Nonetheless, we will ask it:

Why would you want to receive money from your business?

The answer is: (1) to cover your current needs for money and (2) to cover your future needs for money.

Few small-business owners will argue with both those reasons.

Fewer small-business owners will do both of them.

Most small-business owners are challenged to succeed at the first one. In fact, succeeding at the first one consumes so much time and energy, most small-business owners never get around to working on the second one.

Why? 

Because most small-business owners fail to plan. When they fail to business plan they pave the path for failing to succession plan. Time spent planning and particularly time spent succession planning keeps the end-point vision front and centre in the business owner’s mind. That vision is linked to longer-term goals. So, longer-term goals are also front and centre in the business owner’s mind. When the end-point vision and long-term goals are front and centre, actions have guiding lights to follow. With guiding lights in place, the likelihood of success increases.

This is another key reason you should create a succession plan.

Separate yourself from the pack.

About the pack: Most small-business owners will be acutely aware of the need for current transfers of money from their business bank to their personal bank. They are acutely aware of the need because they know they need personal money to buy food, pay for a place to live, pay for a car…and pay for a long list of other things. Most small-business owners will expend a great deal of energy figuring out how to make these money transfers to cover their immediate, personal-money needs.

Yet, most small-business owners will expend little or no energy figuring out how to make money transfers to cover future needs. As a result, most small-business owners are ill-prepared to cover personal-emergency cash needs and even more fail to prepare for their retirement-money needs.

Increasing the likelihood of business success…that is one of the main reasons a business owner must perform succession planning. As Napoleon Hill taught in his 1937 classic ‘Think And Grow Rich’ –

“Plan Your Work and Work Your Plan.”

Tags:

Business Plan: Writing Plans | Entrepreneur Thinking | Succession | Values: Personal Values

Thought Tweet #878

by Rick Baker
On Nov 27, 2013

Thought Tweet #878 With habits playing such a huge role in our lives, why are they so often left to chance?

 

The Thinking Behind The Tweet

What force enables habits to roll right over willpower?

For those who believe in evolution...Why and how have habits adapted and risen to such a position of power and influence?

Or, is that looking at it backwards? Are we witnessing an evolutionary battle between habits and willpower where willpower is slowly but surely gaining ground against [the more-primitive and firmly-established] habits?

Setting Succession Plan Objectives – Covering Future Money Needs

by Rick Baker
On Nov 27, 2013

Covering personal-money needs: that’s an iterative process. Do not expect perfection and do not waste time on details. In reality, none of us can forecast the future. The best we can do is make some estimates, make some predictions, and use them as guides. Recognizing this, covering personal-money needs is an iterative process. As with any planning process, the end results improve with review & adjustment…practice takes the plan closer to perfection.

So, the best time to begin the succession planning process is – Now.

Succession Planning: the recommended approach –

1.    Make a ball-park estimate of when you will exit the working world.

2.    Make a ball-park estimate of how much money you will need when you exit the working world.

3.    Figure out how your current small-business fits into your career plan:

·         you may intend to keep your business until you retire?

·         you may want to exit your business soon?

·         you may see your current business as a stepping stone?

4.    Figure out when you plan to exit your current business.

5.    Figure out how much personal money you want to extract from your business between now and then.

6.    Figure out how much personal money you want to extract from your business after you exit it.

7.    Figure out when that money will be delivered from your business bank to your personal bank.

Tags:

Succession

Thought Tweet #877

by Rick Baker
On Nov 26, 2013

Thought Tweet #877 Our success in this world of other people increases when we develop abilities to observe people & understand them.


The Thinking Behind The Tweet

The challenge is sometimes we are so self-consumed by aches and pains and daily stresses and strains we are oblivious to other people. 

Tags:

Influencing | Thought Tweets

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